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Starter bike...

Started by CajunR, April 09, 2011, 10:45:41 AM

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CajunR

So we're watching 'Long Way Round'... Ewan and Charlie triumphantly arrive in New York, and my wife turns to me and says "I want a motorcycle.  We need to ride across the country together." 

[clap] [clap] [clap] [clap] [clap] [clap] [clap] [clap] [clap]

So I'm starting to think about a first bike for her....  We both think something with an 'upright' position and low displacement would be best.  My first thought is a used XT225 (found this immediately: http://dallas.craigslist.org/ndf/mcy/2314840048.html), or a CRF230L...  Any others you guys can suggest?  It would sorta make sense to start her on the DR-Z400 I own, but I think something a little shorter and less powerful might be a better/safer bet.

Oh, she's NEVER ridden a motorcycle before.  She can drive the hell out of a standard transmission, so the concept of clutch/shift won't be too bad.  Getting the mechanics down... well, it might take a while.  [thumbsup]
It's such a fine line between stupid and clever.

Jester

Honda Rebel.  A lot of the MSF courses use em, but they have a very low seat height, not bad looking by any means, and won't get you in trouble.  Even brand new, they are pretty cheap.
09’ 848     07’ S2R800

Pinocchio

#2
Instead of spending good money on a Rebel:
Buy her a two-day MSF course first, and go watch her. Plenty of riders in those courses are "just thinking about it."
If she hasn't talked herself out of riding by the end of the second day, and she looks like she is "getting it", buy a lowering kit for the DR, a good set of gear, and a couple of track days with the money you saved.

IMHO, anyone who can ride with adequate competence is better off on the streets of Dallas with more HP and better brakes, rather than less.
1969 Scrambler (450 “Jupiter”), 2005 MTS 1000DS, 2007 Monster S4RS, 2010 MTS 1200S Touring, 2018 Monster 1200R, 2021 Monster 937+

muskrat

Agree with Pinochio.
Virago 750 would be ideal for learning and easy/cheap fixes
Can we thin the gene pool? 

2015 MTS 1200
09 Electra Glide

system error

Mindy is doing pretty well on her M695 which is what I have.  She's never driven a standard but shifting hasn't been a problem yet.  She road on the back of her fathers HD as a kid a ton but never actually operated a motorcycle until now.  I never rode street until last August.  Before that it was all quads on the sand dunes and that was back in 1995 and I started, and continue to love, my M695.  A used 695 or older 600'ish may not be too bad, plus her learning curve could be higher since she would have more to work with power wise.  Just my two cents.  That said, the MSF course would be a good investment prior to a bike. 
'13 Multistrada 1200
Fiat 500

My God, it's full of stars!

Cher


What about a KLR650?  Upright position, competent all around with a bazillion after market parts.  And if it ever gets dropped it could be cheaply repaired...  Or not; it's a dual-sport so you could just log the damage as a battle scar from y'all's last trip around the world  :D 

TXGrillGuy

Great to hear, Cajun. Good luck to you guys.  [thumbsup]
2008 Multistrada 1100S

muskrat

Can we thin the gene pool? 

2015 MTS 1200
09 Electra Glide

muskrat

Can we thin the gene pool? 

2015 MTS 1200
09 Electra Glide

CajunR

Solid advice, guys.  We had definitely planned to get her into an MSF class.  I have considered a KLR650...  I don't know.  It would make the most sense to keep what we have (the DR-Z)... and 40hp isn't that crazy for a first bike. 
It's such a fine line between stupid and clever.

Pinocchio

#10
Quote from: CajunR on April 09, 2011, 09:00:23 PM
Solid advice, guys.  We had definitely planned to get her into an MSF class.  I have considered a KLR650...  I don't know.  It would make the most sense to keep what we have (the DR-Z)... and 40hp isn't that crazy for a first bike.  
40 HP ain't squat, unless the rider weighs 95 lbs. Then 40 Hp is a wheelie'n  machine. 'nuff said? ;)
I wish I had a DR-Z400SM:

....or a SV650:
1969 Scrambler (450 “Jupiter”), 2005 MTS 1000DS, 2007 Monster S4RS, 2010 MTS 1200S Touring, 2018 Monster 1200R, 2021 Monster 937+

CajunR

Quote from: Pinocchio on April 09, 2011, 09:21:51 PM
40 HP ain't squat, unless the rider weighs 95 lbs. Then 40 Hp is a wheelie'n  machine. 'nuff said? ;)
I wish I had a DR-Z400SM:



LOL  That's what I have!!

It's such a fine line between stupid and clever.

Pinocchio

From the looks of that bike, you already know the lowering options:
After market seat to lose about an inch, adjust the setup and get another inch, then lowering kit as a last resort.

Now I understand your hesitation. If you let her ride that bike, she'll never give it back!
1969 Scrambler (450 “Jupiter”), 2005 MTS 1000DS, 2007 Monster S4RS, 2010 MTS 1200S Touring, 2018 Monster 1200R, 2021 Monster 937+

CajunR

Quote from: Pinocchio on April 10, 2011, 08:15:36 AM

Now I understand your hesitation. If you let her ride that bike, she'll never give it back!


YEP!  ...and that she might see videos like this and get some ideas:

DRZ 400 SM supermoto super moto jump
It's such a fine line between stupid and clever.

Pinocchio

Urban supermoto! [bow_down]

I wonder if they fine by the yard for jumping like that?
1969 Scrambler (450 “Jupiter”), 2005 MTS 1000DS, 2007 Monster S4RS, 2010 MTS 1200S Touring, 2018 Monster 1200R, 2021 Monster 937+